La Monte Young — Iv (agp161)

Recordings from the 1960s involving the Theatre of Eternal Music.

AGP161 is a digital preservation release focusing on rare, out-of-print recordings by La Monte Young. The AGP series was a curated effort to digitize experimental and avant-garde music that had never seen a CD or digital reissue, making these seminal works accessible to modern listeners. Included Works

An exploration of frequency and psychoacoustics. Historical Context La Monte Young IV (AGP161)

La Monte Young is widely considered the "father of Minimalism." His work in the 1960s moved away from traditional musical structures in favor of:

The idea that a piece of music has no beginning or end, existing as a continuous environment. Drone: Extensive use of long-form, unchanging pitches. Recordings from the 1960s involving the Theatre of

As an "AGP" release, these files were originally shared via community trackers and archives like UbuWeb and Internet Archive . They are transcriptions from original vinyl or magnetic tapes, preserved with the intent of cultural education rather than commercial gain.

The primary focus of this specific volume is Young’s early exploration into and Sustained Tones . It typically includes: As an "AGP" release, these files were originally

Because Young is notoriously protective of his archives and official releases are rare and expensive (such as the Well-Tuned Piano box sets), the AGP161 collection served as a vital resource for scholars and fans of the American avant-garde. It captures the raw, often abrasive sound of his early experiments with amplification and frequency oscillation. Technical Note